King Saud Medical City

SHARE

King Saud Medical City

Modernizing the Oldest Medical City in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

A multi-phased development in the capital city of Riyadh, the King Saud Medical City replaces the oldest medical city in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The campus includes the creation of a new trauma center that will serve the entire region, a first for the medical city.

The entire campus is designed to align with the existing Islamic geometries of the old city, to allow unobstructed patient views, and to maximize shadowing of a new pedestrian green plaza. Walking paths connect one building to another, and are intentionally always in shade making the pedestrian connections viable even in summer months. Designed with sustainability in mind, the buildings create enough condensate to water the central green, to fill the reflecting pools, and to feed the waterways and fountains.

Key features of the King Saud Medical City include:

The 102-bed emergency department includes three acuity zones — high acuity, minor care and rapid assessment. The treatment rooms are distributed into these groups so they can be staffed as patient volumes demand or demographically segregated as cultural needs dictate.

Private patient treatment rooms are further broken into smaller pods of 12 to maximize privacy and access to patients.

Primary clinical support areas are conveniently located to be shared between the pods, and all secondary support and staff areas are located at the midpoint of the department for equal access to all acuity zones. This deliberate arrangement of program spaces will improve the patient experience and staff work flow.

The resuscitation and trauma procedure rooms are clustered in a “trauma” suite near the ambulance entrance. The suite provides easy access to imaging services and an appointed oversized elevator connects trauma patients to the surgery center and ICU.

The ambulance entry holds multiple parking spaces and can be converted into a decontamination area in surge conditions. EMT support spaces and permanent decontamination rooms round out the emergency department design.